Birdwatchers: Mary Mary (It's To You I Belong) (Alternate version, different
guitar / no organ)

22.

Birdwatchers: Mary Mary (It's To You I Belong)

23.

Birdwatchers: Cry A Little Bit

24.

Birdwatchers: Turn Around Girl

25.

Birdwatchers: You Got It

26.

Birdwatchers: Put A Little Sunshine In My Day

27.

Birdwatchers: Than You Say Bo Bah

28.

Birdwatchers: Can I Do It (as featured in the film WILD REBELS)

29.

Sammy Hall w/ Birdwatchers: Just Be Yourself

30.

Sammy Hall w/ Birdwatchers: Weeping Analeah

31.

Glass Bubble: Dreamin' In The Rain

32.

Glass Bubble: You Don't Need A Reason

33.

New Rock Band: Rock Steady

34.

New Rock Band: Little David

35.

Mousetrap: Spinning Wheel

36.

Mousetrap: Rhymetyme

37.

Birdwatchers: Mr. Skin

38.

Birdwatchers: Come Home Baby

39.

Sammy Hall: Drug Talk

Duane Allman plays on tracks 33 & 34.

(The Birdwatchers used various aliases: The
Apollos, Security Blankets, Glass Bubble, The New Rock Band, and Mousetrap).

Sources1) Stuart Krause:
'Duane Allman: The Studio Recordings'
published in the November 2005 issue of 'Discoveries'. According to Stuart
Krause, Duane plays slide guitar on these tracks.

2) The booklet of the CD release of Clarence Reid's 'Dancin'
With Nobody But You Babe' (Water 121, 2003).

3)http://limestonelounge.yuku.com/forum/viewtopic/id/592 :. . . . . In the summer of 1968, Alaimo and Shapiro scored a huge local hit
with "Sandcastles", by a Jacksonville band called the Bitter Ind. When the
famous club The Bitter End asked that the band's name be changed, the group was
told their new name from that point on would be THE 31st OF FEBRUARY.
The 31st of February was a trio, but they'd be joined in performance by a pair
of brothers from Daytona Beach, Duane and Gregg Allman. All would do session
work at Henry Stone's Tone Studios in Hialeah.
One session featured members of the Birdwatchers jamming with Duane Allman
(on bass). What resulted was the track "Rock
Steady", issued on Henry Stone's Scott label under the name "THE NEW ROCK BAND".
"Rock Steady" reached #27 on WQAM in December 1968. The airplay prompted Laurie
Records to take a chance on the track.
The flip side, "Little David", was merely the instrumental track to "Rock
Steady". . . . .